In the time of Kaliyug, when the need of the hour is to spiritualise society, the role of the householder seeker is a crucial one. Juggling career, family, multiple relationships and traffic jams, the householder must bloom like the proverbial lotus in the muck of everyday life More>>
Alternative therapies are more natural and safer, unlike orthodox medicine
I must have
been five when I had my first brush with alternative therapy. I was with
my grandparents in Almora when I had this excruciating stomach pain at
nightwhen it is not easy to get a doctor, especially in the hills.
While the other family members were hunting for some pills, my unperturbed
grandmother took out a little book wrapped in a red cloth. She made me
lie on the bed and chanted some mantras. She then produced a peacock feather
from the same box and, still chanting, ran it over my body several times.
My pain suddenly
disappeared! It was natural and safer, I felt, than going to the doctor
at night, in the hills.
Home remedies using herbs
and condiments have been practiced in our family as far back as I can
remember. Later, I married a doctora super specialist in respiratory
medicinewho believes that at the end of the day, the patient should
feel better; the curative measures are not important. He may not practice
it himself, but he's open to any form of alternative therapy as long as
it gives results. I treat my children with homeopathy.
For chronic ailments, I prescribe acupressure
and magnet
therapy to friends and relatives.
Alternative therapies are fast catching on. Flip through the Yellow Pages,
you will find heads such as: ayurvedic
medicines, homeopathic consultants, acupuncturists,
nature
cure, yoga center, herbal
clinics and so on.
Newspapers regularly carry advertisements of workshops on reiki,
stress
management, past
life therapy etc. What's happening? Whichever way you turn, people
tell you to consider another path. Dissatisfaction with today's way of
living is leading to a reappraisal of old ideas and systems. This is reintroducing
a holistic view of life, which brings in the intimate relationship between
body, mind and spirit.
Truly, well-being depends on harmony. That means not only being well balanced
as an individual physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually, but
also being one with everyone and everything around you. By the same token,
disease is a result of disruption of that harmony. Holistic health, therefore,
takes a much broader view of life than orthodox medicine, which defines
health narrowly as the absence of disease.
We have always had yoga, ayurveda, naturopathy, even magnet therapy, unani
and Tibetan
medicine to turn to if all else failed. But lately, the choices have
widenedaromatherapy,
Bach
flower remedies, color
therapy, pyramids,
marma therapy,
ozone
therapy, water
therapy the list is endless. These systems are not new. In fact,
they are the oldest in the worldit's just that they have now been
urbanized.
Alternative medicine is attracting people as it offers hope when orthodox
medicine cannot. For some, the philosophy behind the therapy is as important
as its effects. The very fact that an individual is able to participate
in his/her cure is a welcome alternative to passive pill taking.
A common denominator linking holistic therapies is a belief in the curative
power of nature. Treatment
is invariably aimed at unlocking the individual's self-healing potential
rather than being interventionist.
India has a number of doctors who are blending alternative therapies with
conventional medicine. Psychiatrists are using hypnotherapy.
Anesthesiologists are taking help from acupuncture. Physiotherapists are
using acupressure and reflexology.
Despite the fact that mainstream medical thinking is still rooted in the
science of the past, it seems inevitable that the tide will turn towards
holistic health. It's not necessarily a matter of dumping everything that
medical science has stood for, but of redrawing the boundaries.
One factor that accounts for orthodox medicine's obsession with the physical
is that psychological factors are elusive and virtually impossible to
quantify precisely. The irony is that orthodox medicine lags behind science.
Quantum mechanics and other branches of physics have revealed that laws
of the mechanistic world only operate at one level. When you go to the
domains of the very small, the world of protons, neutrons and other atomic
particles, or the very large, the universal scale, other laws apply.
A comparable set of possibilities applies in the field of health and disease.
Many forms of alternative medicine deal with aspects of our nature which
have been ignored by orthodox medicine.